Q2 2022 Airspan Networks Holdings Inc Earnings Call
Greetings and welcome to AirSpan Network Holdings second quarter 2022 earnings conference. At this time all participants are on a listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star 0 on your telephone keypad.
Please be aware that the slides for today's event are available for download through the webcast.
As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the call over to AirSpan's CFO , Mr. David Brandt. Thank you, sir. Thank you, sir, for being here.
Thank you very much.
The following discussion will include forward-looking statements. Comments that are not statements of fact, including projections of future financial results and other items are considered forward-looking and involve risks and uncertainties.
The risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual financial and operating results to differ significantly from our forward-looking statements are detailed in our SEC filings, available on our Investor Relations website at ir.airspan.com.
We encourage you to review our earnings release and our course fee report on Form 10Q for the coursing period ending June 30th 2022 which are available on our website.
On this call we will discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures. For the identification of non-GAAP financial measures, the most directly comparable financial measure and a reconciliation between the two, see our earnings release and our coursely report on Form 10Q.
The Q2 2022 investor presentation is available for reference on our website and will be referred to at points during this call.
I will now turn the call over to AirSpan Chairman and CEO Eric Sternstrom.
Thank you, David. Good morning and thank you for joining us for AirSpan's second quarter earnings call.
Before we begin, I would like to extend a warm welcome to our shareholders joining us today.
I would also like to thank the analysts on the call for following the progress in our bit.
Our plan for today is to update you on the general market trends and explain what makes Airspan so well positioned to monetize these trends and opportunities.
I will start with a review of our progress in the last month and with some general comment on the 5G worldwide rollout site.
Glenn Laxall and David Brandt will add color on Market Operations and Financials.
Then we will take your questions in a Q&A session.
As you can see from our results issued yesterday, AirSpan's progress in the second quarter reflected significant top-line growth compared to 1Q22 and the year-ago second quarter, as well as significant gross margin growth compared with 1Q22.
Revenue increased 25% versus 1Q and gross margin improved 8 percentage points to 40.2%.
CAS usage decreased as supply chain linearity in the quarter improved from 1Q with less back-end loading in the quarter, improving the collection cycle and reducing extra charges for expediting.
While operating conditions remain challenging, it was heartening to have improved quarterly revenue and smoother functioning on the supply chain.
Customer momentum continued into Q with the receipt of additional purchase orders from our four largest customers and signing two substantial hyperscaler deals supporting our growth in private networks.
We specialize in building wireless technology that connects users to the cloud.
New use cases like neutral host microcells to be used instead of distributed ANT-PENa systems continue to expand our addressable market.
Our largest in-building customer for neutral host microcells ordered a record volume of product in the quarter to more than double the number of buildings covered.
Glenn will go into more detail on the progress of some of our other significant projects and accounts.
The RAN infrastructure market has been relatively flat to low growth.
Prior to the 5G deployment, with MNO operators buying closed systems from a handful of large equipment manufacturers.
The broad-based rollout of 5G is changing this model.
Macrocell deployments for coverage are giving way to microcell for lower cost coverage, density, and capacity.
Cost-effective coverage and capacity in the new hyper-connected 5G age are two challenges that our products are optimized to solve through innovative harnessing of differentiated product design, leveraging a breakthrough silicon, and our substantial software code base.
Our software-defined approach also enables the cost-effective management of millions of network elements and endpoints.
Geopolitical concerns are also increasing the range of potential opportunities.
The recently enacted CHIPS Act puts a substantial financial commitment of $1.5 billion into the network equipment industry.
Furthering the design of OpenRAMP products.
Airspan, as a US-based company with a leading open RAN track record, is well positioned to assist in this vital mission.
In addition, the UK government has hastened plans to release 250 million sterling for a large-scale open round deployment.
Today, our technologies are key components of some of the largest and most innovative open RAN networks in the world, and our portfolio is recognized for its unique attributes and innovations by friendly governments looking to strengthen the national security aspects of communications infrastructure.
Let me turn the call over to Glenn Laxdahl, our President and Chief Operating Officer, to provide additional perspectives on our progress.
Thanks Eric.
I will cover some detail regarding our business in Q2 and in the first half.
The second quarter results were encouraging in a challenging supply chain environment with revenue meeting guidance and gross margins coming in just above the high end of the range.
Global demand across our lead customers remains strong, and we're also seeing good progress in the developing private networks market.
AirSpan operates in three business areas, mobile networks, private networks, and fixed wireless.
In mobile networks, we continue to drive good volume with Rakuten and RelianceGeo.
with significant new orders from both customers in Q2. We're also seeing good progress in the cable MSO market in both bookings and revenue with a large deployment in a Tier 1 operator in the US.
Going forward, we expect to see continued momentum with our large customers as well as adding new ones.
as the market shifts from primarily macro cell to micro cell deployment.
we will be able to take advantage of our unique micro cell and related automation capabilities.
In particular, on the Microsoft front, we see growth in millimeter wave deployments in Asia and CBRS deployments in the US.
The second market we focus on is enterprise private networks.
We're seeing growing traction.
with the multiple 5G private networks trials and deployments going on across North America, Europe , and Asia.
While this is a nascent market, we are seeing significant bookings momentum across a range of private networks customers.
in the first half of the year.
We added more than 120 private networks.
across 4G and 5G, which brings our total to over 300 private networks deployments.
Of those, approximately half are 5G private networks, evidence of the accelerating market uptake of 5G.
One private network that we're in deployment on today is the 5G area ground network for Gogo.
We're currently deploying the 5G ground stations with Gogo, and we're also developing the related 5G aircards which go in the planes.
In addition, we're shipping 4G AirCards to GoGo in volume in 2022.
and we will be shipping 5-year cards in 2023.
As of the end of June , we've deployed about two-thirds of the 150 ground stations and will complete the deployment in Q3.
The third market we focus on is fixed wireless access.
We're in FCC testing for our next generation ASICs, ASICs solution, and we expect to be complete by the end of August .
We're currently trialing the solution with three tier one customers.
and we expect deployments toward the end of Q3.
The solution is the first to market to address both 5 GHz and 6 GHz bands in a single product.
From a bandwidth perspective, we're achieving 4.5 gigabits per second in the field with Multi-User MIMO.
This is a step function improvement in performance, and the product is market leading.
While the demand is strong in each of these three markets the supply chain remains a challenge.
We successfully delivered our Q2 results despite facing significant supply challenges including continued component shortages, decommits, and COVID-related shutdowns in China. Taken together, these factors contribute to higher component and logistics costs and impacted our gross margin.
To offset some of this impact, we've been able to secure price increases with key customers.
We expect to see continued impacts from the supply chain into the second half of 2022 with long lead times across the board.
Now let me turn it over to David to walk through the financial results.
Thanks, Glenn.
Referring to slide 11 in the investor presentation, we saw revenue for the second quarter of 46.9 million, up 25% sequentially from the first quarter and up 12% from the same period last year.
Gross profit of $18.8 million was up 56% compared to last quarter and down 2% over last year's second quarter.
Second quarter net loss was $21 million compared to a net loss of $29.7 million last quarter and a net loss of $10.4 million in the second quarter of 2021.
Adjusted EBITDA was a loss of 12.3 million compared to a loss of 18 million last quarter and a loss of 5.4 million in the year-ago period.
Gross margin was 40.1% up from 32.1% last quarter and down from 45.7% in last year's second quarter.
with the majority of the year-over-year variance due to higher costs in the current quarter related to components and trades, together with product revenue mix.
with higher average margin non-recurring engineering revenues in the year-ago quarter.
The sequential quarter gross margin improvement was due primarily to lower quarterly period costs amortized over higher quarterly revenue.
Production and shipping during the quarter was more linear than that of the first quarter, which allowed us to improve the distribution cadence and schedule shipments more cost-effectively.
It is important to note the effect of the depreciation of the Japanese yen on this course's results.
Specifically, the depreciation of the yen from the rate at which related orders were booked and priced resulted in an approximate 3% decrease in this quarter's gross margin.
Demand for our products is strong, though supply chain challenges continue to be dominated by long lead times and higher transportation costs.
We continue to work hard to mitigate these challenges.
finding alternative components, instituting technological design changes, and working closely with our partners.
We anticipate such supply chain challenges to extend through 2022.
In order to address the need to satisfy the company's continuing obligations and realize its long-term strategy, we have taken steps to reduce cash operating expenses by approximately 10% by the fourth quarter from the 2Q level of approximately 29 million.
We are evaluating additional actions to improve operating and financial results.
including focusing the company's efforts to factor receivables, and continuing to implement cost reduction initiatives to reduce non-strategic costs in operations and expand the company's labour force in lower-cost geographies with headcount reductions in higher-cost geographies.
Given the supply chain environment, we expect Q3 2022 revenue of approximately $42 to $48 with a gross margin of between 38 and 40%.
Through the combination of supply chain tightness and currency depreciation, for the full year 2022 we now anticipate top line growth of approximately 5%.
These views may be impacted by, among other things, component availability, related expenses, and challenges from COVID-19 restrictions in Asia.
Air Fan ended the quarter with 36 million of cash. Second quarter cash use was 9.8 million, primarily due to the loss in the quarter.
With that, Eric, Glenn and I will open the call to your questions.
Operator, please prompt for questions.
Thank you. The floor is now open for questions. If you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad at this time. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star 2 if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Once again, that is star 1 to register a question at this time.
The first question today is coming from George Nautter of Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Hi guys, thanks very much. I guess I took a look at the 10Q filing and…
You know, I noticed there's some language in there about potentially having to renegotiate covenants with fortress
and an increased likelihood of breaking through some of the covenants that were renegotiated, I think a quarter or two ago. So can you kind of talk about, you know, the balance sheet and where you are relative to covenants and the likelihood of getting those renegotiated with with fortress.
So yeah, let me.
Let me put a couple of overview comments and then David can go into more detail. We have a good relationship with Fortris. They're very active. We have obviously been through every negotiation and have a focus on this particular set of metrics. As David mentioned, we are focusing, for instance, on receivables factoring, which will take about $20 million forward in our cash flow projection. There are measures we're taking together with operational cost expense that...
to do the best job we can of not needing to negotiate very much. And clearly if it does happen, they're an active shareholder and equity holder as well as a lender in this equation.
David? David Wilson Yes, thanks Eric. Yes, factoring receivables, so the two that we are focused on is the EBITDA covenant and the cash covenant. We're seeing supplier terms tighten significantly with our major CEMs and that's putting pressure on our GPOs.
So, measures like factoring receivables and reducing OPEX helps improve our cash position and we're in discussions with Fortress as an active participant in this.
Got it. And then there was an article I think recently about the project with GoGo talking about some delays in that project. I think I heard you mention that the line cards for 5G were going to be delivered in 2023 and it sounds like that's...
It sounds like that's a bit of a delay. Is that indeed correct? And can you talk about what's driving that delay? And how does that impact your kind of views of the business this year and cash generation as well?
Yeah, I'll take that on.
So, you are correct. We are shipping today the base stations, the 5G base stations. We've completed the base station or the ground station site deployment development. We're about two-thirds of the way through the deployment of the ground stations as at the end of Q2 and we'll complete that total 150 ground station deployment.
In addition, we're shipping 4G aircards that go into the airplanes and we are in development on the 5G aircards.
We were expecting to get the chipset back that populates the 5G Air Guard.
right about now. And that chipset has been delayed by about six months. So now we're taking the deployments that were expected on the 5G AirCard in the last part of Q4, and those shift into the first half of 2023.
Got it. Okay.
Okay, thank you very much. And then the other one I wanted to ask, you guys mentioned the CHIPS Act and then it sounds like also a program the UK government has 250 million pounds. Is that an opportunity for Airspan? I'm just sort of thinking about how that might operate. Is there an application process to participate in those funds? What's the likelihood of being involved there?
We're very focused on that.
George, we have been working both Washington and London very consistently since the Huawei ban. We've had other benefits of that. Rip and replace money, for instance, is starting to be distributed. ARDOF money you're familiar with. But this particular initiative, the language survives the process of quite a bit of pruning.
to come out as we wanted it. There's a nice structural language for a funding program to develop open RAN with a collection of U.S. suppliers. We're front and center in that queue and working through now the next step, which is how the funds get dispersed. We don't have anything in our short-term forecast, but it's something I think will become very significant by the second half of 23. Obviously with our experience at RACATAN and some of the open RAN projects that we've done around the world where we're opposed to the RAN project.
a perfect poster child for how to further this industry and bring back some supply chain security and resilience to the US. In the UK, it's going to play out as a major field trial sponsored by the DCMS, which is the ministry responsible for dispersing funds. We were helpful in crafting also their ideas and the programs there. I think you'll see a large scale urban.
done sponsored by the DCMS and done with one of the carriers here. It started well within 23. There is a real sense of urgency in both governments.
And yes, it is a candidate we are
a major candidate for some of those funds.
Okay super I'll pass it on thanks very much guys. Thank you.
Once again, that is star one to register questions at this time. The next question is coming from Tim Savigo of Northland Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Thank you. Please go ahead.
I'd ask a question about...
Well, really, given the supply chain issues, what you might be expecting or what you're seeing...
in terms of revenue growth where you are targeting 5% this year.
versus what you might be seeing on the booking side. And what I'm trying to get to is kind of the...
kind of what sort of growth the business is seeing, you know, ex-supply issues.
And that comment could be for the quarter or what you expect for the year. And then I have a follow-up. Do the math on paper, and then watch the
Good morning, Tim. Our bookings outlook is very favorable. We've had continued traction with our bigger customers. We've got a very fast growing private network side, and then we've got obviously fixed wireless, which is...
It's really being bolstered by our new product line. So we have an outlook on bookings. It's considerably higher growth. It's 20 percent plus versus what's happening on the revenue side.
Great, appreciate that.
And looking at the revised guidance, that still implies a pretty decent uptick.
in revenues in Q4. I wonder if that's indicative of any easing on the supply side or to what you would attribute that to.
along with the planned OpEx reductions, it looks like you can be getting pretty close to at least EVIT.break even in Q4 in that scenario. Yeah, and we do have a...
Go ahead, sir. Strong outlook on the fourth quarter. We've had some orders that came in recently that we couldn't convert in 90 days. Some of those orders will flow into the fourth quarter. We've had visibility on the specifics of the supply chain on those.
We've got fixed wireless with the new product starting to ship here in the third quarter and a healthy backlog there and a tremendous demand as well as some pretty significant wins on the fixed wireless side with a traditional carrier. That's driving good expectations for the fourth quarter. I think the focus on improving the supply chain is very important.
flows in advance. We've done more long lead time procurement. We've done a lot of work to make sure that we've got a production flow that's a lot more linear than where we were in the first quarter. It is in fact the case. We're looking strong here in the second half. Your breakeven point, yes, we would really love to get the breakeven by the end of the year. That adjusted EBITDA basis, it may be the first quarter, but we're laser focused on that at the moment. Thank you.
The hurdles have become less large as we look at the OPEX reductions that we've made, as well as we're getting additional pricing flowing through now on some of our deals, where as you know, we had to work off the backlog of pricing that was done pre-inflation and pre-YAN.
as well, or pre-end evaluation. Our new business in Japan is also being priced at obviously a current rate of exchange.
Got it. Thanks very much.
Thank you. The next question is coming from Chris. How of Barrington research? Please go ahead.
Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Just a follow-up.
Some of Tim's questions there. You mentioned the last point, the additional pricing flowing through here in the fourth quarter. Some better optics when you look at it sequentially versus the third quarter.
Should we expect a continuation of those trends as we look into the first half and second half of 23? How are you thinking about...
gross margin. You mentioned it in the context of the third quarter guidance and should we remain relatively conservative on that line as we look to kind of building a cadence with hopefully an improved environment.
Hi, Chris. Yeah, I think we should, you know, the increased pricing should take, should come into effect in the fourth quarter and then into the first half of next year. I also think that the supply, we're already seeing some easing of supply chain challenges in availability and cost of transportation, for example. …
As that eases, we should get a couple more percentage points through supply chain easing going into next year.
Okay, great. Thanks for taking my question. That's all I have for right now. Thanks, Grace. Thank you. Once again, ladies and gentlemen, that is Star 1 to register a question at this time. The next question is coming from Scott Surley of Ross. Please go ahead. First question is the photo of Ronald dead.
Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Hey, Eric, I'm not sure if I missed this up front, but I was wondering if you guys provide any relative mix between the different end markets both in the 2Q report results and kind of the outlook, especially as you're looking to 23 in terms of private networks and fixed wireless access. And then I had a couple of follow-ups. Okay, thanks again, Eric.
Yeah, David, you want to.
We split out by types of revenue, products, licenses, NRE. We don't split the markets, Scott. Okay. Eric, just looking at the private networks opportunity, I'm wondering if you could help frame us in terms of the size of the individual deals. It sounds like you are up to 300 in terms of various pilots, but I'm wondering what the magnitude is.
per deployments, how you should be thinking about that. And also, do you start to see a follow-on tail to those initial deployments where there's continued orders each quarter going forward?
Yeah, I'll start with a second. The tail is super encouraging. As I mentioned in my comments, one of the bigger deployments we have is going into buildings where DAS systems would historically have been purchased. We are estimated to be 34 percent of the cost of DAS.
very tech, lean forward company. And for instance, the blocks of orders we're getting there cover 15 to 20 buildings at a time. This most recent one expanded that. And so those are seven figure deals. Today, we do have a whole lot of early stage adopters where the orders are considerably smaller. But in almost every one of those, we don't waste time with ones that don't have a path to growth to get a seven figure.
A good example would be a major airline manufacturer who's got about $400,000 in location and they've got 52 locations. That kind of dimension is it. I think there's a positive contagion here. When one group gets it right, for instance, we have an airport in Germany. I think it's been announced. One of the significant airports there awarded us a Phase I. A while back, they just awarded us Phase II for that airport.
a bunch more phases in the queue to expand the footprint. And then we want a sister airport on the strength of that. We are extremely excited about what is happening in private networks and that conversion of spend, of IT technology that was historically spent on Wi-Fi now being spent on the 3GPP system, 4G, 5G, and we are seeing nice trends on that. We have also set the stage with some very major distribution partners, household names.
in the FAANG world who have signed supply agreements with us. Those supply agreements have taken some time to negotiate because the facets involved are those customers running the networks themselves as network as a service through coupling their products with ours through straight distribution. Also a lot of the seeds that have been planted there have now been released out to the systems integrator partners that those partners of ours have and that's a very substantial global network.
I would cautiously say there's ten times more salespeople talking about AirSpan today than there were just six months ago due to the multiplier effect we're getting on that. I think it's going to lead to a very exciting next year. I think it's going to lead to a very exciting next year.
Very good, that's very helpful, thank you. And Eric, on the rip and replace front, you know, we've had 1.9 billion approved by the FCC and I think that there is, you know, before Congress could take that figure up to 5.4 billion. One of your customers, GoGo, got a significant allocation at least of that initial tranche and could be up over 300 million. I'm wondering if you could provide some color, are you well positioned as they transition their network and upgrade their network from ZTE infrastructure?
you know, how you are positioned on that front and then others, you know, within that framework of that potential five billion dollar opportunity. Are there other customers that you have in there that you would expect to translate to upside for you guys?
Yeah, so on the first customer, as Glenn mentioned in the comments, we are selling 4G, the airplane side today into that mix. So I'm pretty confident on the infrastructure side and excited about the award.
on, and so therefore feel very well positioned. On the other customers, we have as an example a customer who has 10 networks and applied for a substantial $300 million of money, ended up getting a third of it. That's actually helping us because their initial approach was let's just use Ericsson, one of the big OEMs, because cost doesn't matter because we pass that back to the US government and to us as taxpayers, and we know that the job will get done eventually.
Now, it's sharpened their focus on the products we make, because we make products that can get the job done at a third the cost. It's really exciting, because that customer is adopting us right now, and we're shipping them and starting to see our first revenue, in this case, in the fixed wireless side, but using license spectrum. We've just added also our MOMOSA products set into the mix there, because they're saying that's a less expensive way for them to serve.
the 15,000 fixed wireless customers they need to do rip and replace on, than just putting up an expensive macro tower from one of the traditional OEM suppliers. So it is exciting and I'm heartened to see some focus by the recipients of the money. You mentioned the 1.X billion going to 5.9. I think the customers are becoming more price sensitive and I should say architectural cost sensitive and that's a super tailwind for Airspan.
We'll get a lot of attention out of folks that a year ago would have said we're a small operator, let's just go with the big two that sell to rural America today and that's been helping us.
Very, very helpful. Thank you so much. And lastly, if I could, kind of transitioning to the mimosa front with the Wi-Fi 66 gigahertz solution coming out, I think there's a lot of interest around that. There have also been some, I'll call proprietary competing solutions out there, I think that have been earlier to market. I'm wondering if you could kind of compare and contrast where you guys come in from an expected price point and kind of see how you see that opportunity really ramping up in 2023. Thanks.
Glenn, you want to take that?
Sure, I'll take that. So in the prepared comments, we talked about the next generation A66 product coming to market toward the end of Q3. It's the first product to hit the market with both 5 GHz and 6 GHz addressed in a single radio. The 6 GHz rollout is gonna be significant, and a significant amount of the demand that we have building for that product is...
is based on the ability to go after that new fresh 1 GHz plus of spectrum. We're in trials right now on that product with three tier one customers.
One customer in particular, one Asian customer in particular, is currently in active trials and seeing over 4 GHz per second in their field trial with that product. So it's leading to a, it's garnering a lot of interest and demand. From a cost perspective, we're extremely competitive on the cost front.
to relative to at least one of those large competitors that you're talking about. Extremely competitive on the cost front, on both the access point side and the UE side or the CPE side. So we feel really, really good about our position. And as we come to market with that solution at the end of Q3, we expect pretty solid volume and growth in the mimosa business overall heading into Q4 and the first half of 2023. So there's a lot of interest building.
and we want to capitalize on that. Great, thanks so much. Thank you, Scott.
Thank you. At this time I'd like to turn the floor back over to AirSpan's Chairman and CEO Mr. Eric Stone Strom for closing comments.
Thank you. Okay, thank you.
Our business outlook remains encouraging.
We have a product portfolio that is gaining wide acceptance across a wide range of major technology partners, end users, and market.
5G continues unabated even with the economic headwinds facing the world economy.
Governments remain committed to alternative domestic supply paths for critical network infrastructure and are willing to invest to ensure network equipment and supply chain diversity.
Lastly, our operational model improves its extraordinary supply chain and logistics challenges These tax Bureau ay
One last note, we will be participating broker conferences and one-on-one meetings in the coming months including upcoming conferences with Jefferies and Rosenblatt Security.
We look forward to engaging with investors at these events.
Thanks again for your interest and support.
Ladies and gentlemen, our 2Q-
2022 earnings update.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your participation. This concludes today's event. You may disconnect your lines or log off the webcast at this time, and enjoy the rest of your day.
Please hold for the next available conference specialist. Conference Center, may I have your name please? Sure, that's David Brown. And you're with IARA, correct? Correct. Okay, let me please share a line through. Is this for AirSpan? Yep. Okay, stand by please. Okay, thank you. Thank you.